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Interview with Laura Huxley
by Ganga White June, 1998
Laura Archera Huxley is a shining example of
a woman who has practiced and lived yoga most of her life.
She has been creating and riding the wave of awakening that
we now call the "new age". As one of our respected
elder Yoginis she is an inspiring model of the possibility
open to all of us to age gracefully, intelligently and creatively.
Now 86 years old, her mind is fast, sharp and endlessly
inquisitive. She prefers to sit in an asana on the floor,
bolt upright, to chat or dialogue.
Laura Huxley made her teenage debut as a concert violinist
in Carnegie Hall and first came to the United States shortly
before World War II. She studied violin in her native Turin,
Italy as well as Paris, Berlin and Rome where she earned
a professor of Music degree. Prevented by wartime regulations
from pursuing her musical career, she sought other avenues
of creative exploration. She produced documentary films,
played in a major symphony orchestra and intensively studied
health, nutrition, spirituality and psychology. She has
authored many books focusing on her central concern of human
relations and healing the vast amount of avoidable unhappiness.
Her book, You are Not the Target, was an
early model and inspiration for books in the self-help trend.
In 1956 she married Aldous Huxley the legendary author,
essayist, visionary thinker and philosopher. Together they
explored ways of opening the mind to new levels of consciousness.
Aldous Huxley is author of Brave New World, one of
the first books to anticipate the chilling technological
and ecological problems of the modern computer age. He also
wrote what many consider his masterpiece--the novel Island,
his inspirational vision of a utopian new age culture
that integrated many systems of healing, meditation, yoga
and the awakening of consciousness. The Doors of Perception,
his book about the inward journey and psychedelic inquiry,
helped spark the flashing sixties and gave a name to Jim
Morrison's band. Laura and Aldous Huxley were there at the
early opening of those doors with Tim Leary, Richard Alpert
(now Ram Das) and other key movers of culture. Their list
of friends, students, co-workers and admirers reads like
a Who's Who? of remarkable people. After her husband's
death in 1963 (the same day John Kennedy was shot) she wrote
This Timeless Moment, a book describing life
with her husband.
From 1977 to the present, Mrs. Huxley has focused much
of her energy on helping children, "Our Ultimate
Investment". Her foundation by that name
does worldwide service in areas that engender conscious
preparation for conception, conscious conception and reverence
for life. "The most effective way to set world improvement
in motion is to initiate it as early as possible in the
life of all individuals." She considers Karma Yoga,
the yoga of action and service, as central to her philosophy.
Mrs. Huxley is grandmother to her adopted child, Karen,
who is now 24. She has received widespread recognition for
her humanistic achievements. These include an honorary Doctorate
of Human Services, Honoree of the United Nations, Fellowship
to the International Academy of Medical Preventics and World
Health Foundation Peace Price in 1990. Yoga is in a new
and evolving incarnation in the West and we can learn a
lot from one who has pioneered the way in practice, living
and service. It is an honor and joy to know this grand lady.
Ganga: Laura, I consider you a national resource
and treasure.
Laura: Thank you very much. A national resource,
that is very impressive. You mean I pay my taxes. Is that
what you mean?
Ganga: I mean a real inspiration. I hope you will
share, after being a yogini all your life, some insights
for people new to the path. I wanted to get at some of your
secrets.
Laura: There are no secrets, really. It is difficult
because it seems so complicated. Probably, the secret is
to be less complicated. We of course love to make complicationslook
at the way we live. We have this tremendous amount of information,
and probably it is really not so necessary. Maybe if you
just drink water, you are kind to people and walk a little
bit its all done already. But we cannot resist this
sophistication.
Ive done a little yoga, not as a professional, and
every time I have a good teacher, like recently Cheri Clampett,
I see the immense possibilities and subtleties in this discipline.
Its a little bit like music. Each asana is like a
piece of music that has a certain characteristic, a certain
power. One asana is strong, then again another is very soft
and gentle. So you have this modulation from one asana to
another, just as you have from one feeling to another. Then
they all, of course, make you lighter, give you space. I
feel that space is what I get and receive and like to havespace
inside which makes more space for openness outside.
Ganga: Space in the mind. Space in the body.
Laura: Yes, space in the body, space in the mind.
.
Ganga: How did you get into yoga? What brought you
to it?
Laura: My introduction was reading a book on a streetcar
going downtown Los Angeles, many years ago. Someone told
me about it and I bought one of the very early books on
yoga. It was in 1945, when I played in the L.A. Philharmonic
Orchestra. I took a lesson and immediately could see how
wonderful it was. I already had this idea of the empty spine
even before I knew about yoga. I always felt the spine is
central. Why didnt anyone ever speak about it?
Ganga: What do you mean by the empty spine?
Laura: The spine should be empty so that energy
moves up and down. I always felt this way as a child. Yoga
is a natural thing. One time I think I was at the hairdresser
and they had those uncomfortable chairs so I put up my feet
like this [sitting cross-legged]. Somebody said, "Can
you give me some yoga lessons?" They thought right
away that I knew about yoga because I sat in a comfortable
way.
Yogananda was already around when I started, and I met
him and I met a few others. But when you speak about "this
secret", there are no secrets really. Most of it is
just common sense. I call it visionary common sense. Although
it is inspirational, it is just common sense. It is attention
and openness.
You have so many different kinds of yoga. I met Iyengar
in Switzerland with Krishnamurti and [acclaimed violinist]
Yehudi Menuhin. He was giving a lesson to Yehudi and Krishnamurti.
Then I asked for a lesson and finally he gave me some. They
were very strong lessons and very good of course. It was
strange because I was standing on my head and he came and
he slapped my derriere and I thought I was going to fallbut
I didnt.
Ganga: He is famous for that.
Laura: Hes famous for that, yes.
Ganga:Youve met so many extraordinary people.
Can you say more about some of them?
Laura: Yes, I have. There was always an intensity
in Krishnamurti. There was that tremendous intensity most
of the time. It was as though he were ready to explode.
And sometimes he was also playful. I stayed in his house
in Madras. Somehow I felt that what he was saying was to
be discussed and absorbed, but he could be easily misunderstood.
He was fiery natured. And very elegant! A man of tremendous
refinement in all that was visual, in materials, in all
the senses, totally refined and ready to discuss anything
and be very strong about it. We discussed healing, my work
with human potential and Aldous' research with psychedelics.
Ganga:Drugs are such an extraordinary problem in
our society and there is such hysteria. Do you think there
is a positive aspect that is being overlooked and the baby
is being thrown out with the bath water.
Laura: Oh, certainly. There is danger in everything
that we do. We are to eat food otherwise we dont live
and sometimes we eat food that is very damaging.
Ganga: Or we become addicted to food.
Laura: Or addicted to food. Oh, yes, addiction to
food is unfortunately really grave, also to alcohol or to
anything else. But these drugs can be such an extraordinary
gift, really. Some, not all drugs. Again, how can
we speak about "drugs"? It is like speaking about
the human raceeach person is different, each drug
is different!
Ganga: There are different classes of drugs and
they are all being lumped together.
Laura: Yes, but they dont consider nicotine
as a drug. Why dont they put it together with all
the other drugs? And alcohol is certainly one of the most
abused drugs since ever and ever, since Dionysus. They say
have a glass of wine at dinner, which was done in the Latin
countries. In Italy we always had a glass of wine at dinner.
It is a good thing. But if you have dozens of glasses of
wine at dinner it is not so good. Paracelsius said that
the difference between a good medicine and a poison is the
dosage.
Ganga: There is a big resurgence of interest in
shamanism as well as "plant teachers". Do you
think this is a good direction and what would you advise
people?
Laura:I would advise them to study everything that
they ingest. Study first of all their own organism and see
what kind of reaction they might have. Some people just
cannot take certain foods. Thats all. People are allergic.
Some people are allergic to orange juice, can you imagine?
Orange juice is very healthy isnt it? Yet some people
cannot drink it without having an allergic reaction. Also,
who is the person giving it to you? With whom area you taking
it? And where, and even why. It can be a tremendous
gift but it also might be a dangerous gift.
Ganga: Like electricity.
Laura: Like electricity, exactly.
Ganga: How have psychedelics helped or harmed or
influenced you?
Laura: I was deeply affected. They gave me a much
wider view of the world, as well as a much wider view of
our ignorance, and ignorance, according to the Buddha, is
our basic difficulty. Psychedelics and the process of aging
make that clear to me all the time.
Ganga: Let's come back to yoga. You are eighty-six
and you are extraordinarily alert and aware and interested
in so many things. Do you attribute some of this to yoga?
Is this something that was innate in you or did your yoga
practice help?
Laura: Its always nature and nurture together.
The practice of yoga certainly is a fantastic practice.
I only wish I would do it more. I find I can do it alone
but it is much better if I have some guidance. Although
I can do it alone it is a little bit sloppy. Ultimately,
all of those techniques try to bring more oxygen to the
brain. We can think and love better if we have more oxygen.
Ganga:Do you have a pranayama practice? Do you work
with your breath?
Laura: I do it and don't do it. Lately I have not
been very disciplined. You would think that as you get older
you would be more disciplined. As I get older I get less
disciplined. I just play around!
Ganga:Maybe that is good! Aldous, of course, was
an extraordinary person. Hes been called a prophet
of the present age. Hes been called the father of
the psychedelic 60s, one of the fathers. What were
your times with him like?
Laura: They were extraordinary years, not many years
but extraordinary years, because we had this basic, extraordinary
relationship. We had so many interests in common. He would
be in one room and run to my room and say, "look what
I found". He was always researching, and of course
researching on many different levels. I was interested in
these things even before I married him but that accelerated
and made my own knowing much wider and deeper. Wider and
deeper, that is what I would say. Even more than anything
else, those were the exchanges. But more than anything was
the extraordinary kindness of this man, for everyone really.
He started very young to be well known, when he was 20.
Of course as a writer he was sardonic and ironic and all
of that. But as a person he was always very, very kind.
You can find reports from the time he was fifteen that he
was always considerate with people. But as a writer he was
very ironic and shocking and all of those things that made
him famous. There was a sense of humor, strong and sophisticated.
I never saw the part that was cynical, however. He was never
cynical. One of the things that was said about him when
he was young was that he had a contempt for the masses.
On the contrary, he had a concern for the masses. He had
a tremendous concern for people who did not have the possibilities
and the privileges that he, you or I hadaccess to
knowledge, to really be able to improve ourselves because
we didnt have to work ten hours a day in the mines
or somewhere like that.
Ganga: You mentioned his kindness. In the beginning
of our discussion you said that kindness was one of the
most important things. Isnt that how Aldous summed
up his lifes insights once when he was asked by someone?
What was his reply, treat each other a little kinder?
Laura: Be a little kinder to each other. There was
a prodigious group of people, all doctors, Ph.D.s,
probably Nobel Prize winners, and they said, "Mr. Huxley,
Would you tell us something that you found from your research?"
He was so precise and deep in research. He said, "
It is a little embarrassing that after years of experience,
study and research all I can tell you is to be a little
kinder to each other."
Ganga:There is nothing more profound.
Laura: Yes, that is right.
Ganga: His epochal book, Brave New World, was just
voted the fifth best novel of our time. What were the early
days like with him and Timothy Leary and Ram Dass? You were
around for a lot of that.
Laura: Yes. Timothy was always fun. He was always
a charming man. We went to Copenhagen together and Ram Dass
was there too, for a big conference. Tim gave LSD to half
a dozen people, or maybe many more. The next day it was
all over the newspapers. Aldous kept saying, "Tim,
just keep it private, keep it quiet because we want to research
it." Tim could not keep it quiet.
Ganga: They debated that amongst themselves, didnt
they? Aldous wanted to keep it for scientists and religious
people and Timothy wanted to give it to the masses.
Laura: Yes, to everybody.
Ganga: Do you think it was a mistake in retrospect?
Laura: In retrospect it did do some harm because
there has not been much research for thirty years, no research
in drugs, LSD and psychedelics. Now it is beginning again.
After thirty years one should be able to use it properly,
particularly for short term therapy, for enhancement of
talent, certainly for the dying or very sick people so that
they can detach from the body more easily. There are many
other substances, it is not only LSD that does that. So
in that sense it was not good what Tim did. On the one hand
we know some people were hurt, but on the other hand it
accelerated this awareness that there is more to ourselves
than we think there is. It did open the eyes and feelings
and the hearts of many people. I think it would have been
better to keep it quiet just for another few years, but
Timothy couldnt.
Ganga: Aldous left us on the same day that John
Kennedy did?
Laura: That was ironic because the two men were
both very good men and very much concerned with humanity.
Aldous died in this house so quietly and so serenely and
Kennedy being shot like that, really a contrast. I wonder
if they met that afternoon? I hope they did. The ironic
thing also is that we were invited twice to go to the White
House and for some reason, some stupid reason, we didnt
go. And it would have been very good if we had gone. In
fact when we were in Copenhagen in 61 we thought,
now we are going to the White House and give it to them,
this group of people some opening with psychedelics. We
didnt do it. Today is the anniversary of Robert Kennedys
death, which was really as tragic.
Ganga: One's yoga eventually expresses itself in
one's action in the world and I think you have been exemplary
in that. Can you talk a little bit about children as our
ultimate investment?
Laura: That is what I am involved in mostly now.
The situation with children is not good in this country,
nor in other countries. It may be much worse in other countries.
It is not just because of the lack of money. It is the lack
of the awareness that children are very open, smart and
knowing people when they are still very little. Afterwards
they close down. Then they become like everyone and we have
to work again to open up. One of the reasons is that people
become pregnant without preparation. Sixty-eight percent
of the pregnancies in the United States are neither prepared
for nor expected. Of those sixty-eight percent, quite a
bit end in abortion, but still there are a large number
of children that come in this world without being expected.
The preparation for conception to me is one of the most
important things, if we are we interested in the general
progress of our species.
Ganga: Moving toward conscious conception.
Laura: Yes, conscious conception. In other words
you make love for the pleasure and the passion and for the
love that two people have for each other. But then there
is also this other thing. Are we going to make love to have
a child? One has to be clear to do that. If you decide that
you are making love to have a child then you are to prepare.
Prepare physiologically, spiritually, and know that you
have enough money to give him what you have to give him.
Very often mothers go to work right away after the child
is born and, unless the father or someone else stays home,
this is quite serious. A baby has to be near its kin most
of the time when he is little for three, four or five years.
To give him this grounding, this feeling of connection,
this feeling of relationship, is the most important thing.
That is why my work is now Our Ultimate Investment
I have a project that I have been carrying out in Nevada
City and am trying to put it in the public schools. It is
called "Teens and Toddlers" which is a project
for prevention of teenage pregnancy. I get children, young
people fourteen, fifteen, sixteen and even up to eighteen,
to take care of toddlers two or three years old. Toddlers
are so powerful and so egocentric and teenagers are also
so powerful, so egocentric. Here they are put in a school
situation where they are to relate to these little giants
and to think about them, instead of thinking about their
own needs and all of that--which is a natural thing for
all of us. When you are fourteen, fifteen years old it is
even more so.
Ganga: What insight does it give them?
Laura: The first insight is, after two hours of
working with the children, they are exhausted. Thats
the first insight. Then they say, "What, I would have
to continue with this for 24 hours a day!" The baby
has all these needs, almost continuously, every hour you
have to do something for the baby. They always decide to
wait until they are 25 or 30 years old to have a baby. In
the groups that we have made up in the North, there has
been not a single unwanted pregnancy.
Ganga: Thats fantastic.
Laura: Yes, it is because the teenage pregnancy
is such a tragic thing. It is such a sad and tragic thing
because the children who have children do it because they
think they are going to be loved. They are going to be loved,
but they have to give love to be loved otherwise the child
becomes depressed. Isolated and depressed. In other words
apathetic. There have been many experiments with cameras.
I speak about babies all the time, a baby tries to get the
attention of the mother for awhile by looking and moving
and it cries, and cries. Then after awhile, if there is
no response from the mother, it just gives up. You can see
already the giving up in relationship. There is a lot of
that in the world. So teenagers have to be sustained; they
have to be given something to live for and something that
involves them without having to make a child, a human being.
It is extraordinary. I come in this house and if I want
to put in a new bathroom I have to ask the city to come
and check. But anybody can make a baby without any checking,
without thinking. This type of parenting can be tragic because
one of the greatest actions a human being can do is to create
another life. I call children "our ultimate investment."
Ganga: That is a great phrase.
Laura: Yes, but it has a double meaning. They are
also the ultimate investment for tobacco companies or the
liquor industry or the gun industry. Children are the ultimate
investment of all of those that want to make money, to sell,
to dominate. So there are two meanings. They are our ultimate
investment for anyone who is honest and ethical and loving,
but also for all the commerce.
Ganga: It cuts both ways.
Laura: It is a very important work and I hope I
can do it and that it can be done regardless of me. There
is a little bit more awareness we need to have about all
this. Things are happening! Every four hours a gun kills
a child. Every fifty-nine seconds a teenager becomes pregnant.
Can you imagine, every fifty-nine seconds? Today is Saturday.
By Wednesday night there will be one million more people
on Earth. Aldous book was about that sixty-five
years ago. As long as there is no control of
population, the population explosion will make it so easy
for politicians to dominate.
Ganga: It is interesting that the population explosion
started at the same time as the nuclear explosionthe
baby boom and the atomic bomb. What is your view of spirituality?
I think that is what youve been expressing in our
discussion but can you verbalize it?
Laura: I believe more in concrete spirituality rather
than in a spirituality that is divided from the body and
from nature. There are four verses of William Blake.
Man has no Body distinct from his Soul;
for that call'd Body is a portion of Soul
discern'd by the five senses,
the chief inlets of Soul in this age.
And what he says is that the way that the soul is expressed
now, and the only way it expresses itself in this age, is
through the senses. He doesnt mean tomorrow or in
the next century, but in this age. How do I know you or
how do you know me unless there is a connection? The connection
comes by speaking, seeing, being present, or through hearing
if you are not present. Everything has to come through the
senses, as though the soul is speaking out through the senses.
We are not yet communicating with extrasensory perception.
Blake speaks about the soul in this age, not in the future.
So how can we express the soul in this age, in this life,
except through our body?
Ganga: Which also means through our works, our life.
Laura: What we do, what we feel, what we express,
certainly.
Ganga: What would you say about the darkness in
the world, in life?
Laura:The darkness. It is there. There is light.
There is darkness. There is high and there is low. But in
the world now it seems to me this struggle between light
and darkness is more evident than ever. I dont know
if it is more evident because I look into it more or because
there are just so many wonderful people, and much more so
than we even know, trying to do something to help. And look
whats happening now in India, the land of Gandhi,
with atomic bombs. Power is just so much part of the human
being because power is survival. But I wonder if that is
the best way to survive, by killing someone else.
Ganga: To move from darkness to light, you have
an exquisite and sensitive use of light here. The way you
have different colors and there is a lot of beauty around,
nature is practically coming in the windows. What do you
say about beauty and bringing beauty into our lives? What
is your understanding of beauty as youve gone through
the years?
Laura:To me it is a great savior. Its almost
an addiction, and also because you can always do it better.
You know what I mean, you can do gardening a little bit
better. For instance I just try to keep rooms empty, but
I dont succeed. Beauty, well, its one of the
greatest, greatest gifts. I feel sorry sometimes because
people are so worried and so involved in something that
they dont have even five minutes to look at something
beautiful. I find beauty almost everywhere. Now more and
more I find almost everything beautiful. That is why I have
great difficulty in throwing away things because I think
they are quite beautiful. Even the garbage, but I have to
throw that away!
Ganga: Do you have any advice to new people starting
yoga, to young people starting yoga, that would help them
throughout their life?
Laura:My advice is very simple. Just do it. Just
do it! I think that they stop because they do it so much
and then it is too much. I think it probably should be done
continuously. Also, to think about yoga not as something
that you do fifteen minutes a day or half an hour a day.
The awareness that yoga and gives can be used when you wash
dishes.
Ganga: In all areas of your life.
I just thought of something else. You have such lovely
couches and furniture here but every time Ive been
here we always sit on the floor. Is that one of your secrets?
Laura: Probably it is. Most furniture is not made
for peoplethey are made for the people who sell them.
I would much rather sit on the floor. Very rarely do I find
a table and a chair that is comfortable. But the floor is
comfortable. Some people sit on their feetthree-fourths
of the earth sits like that. I would tell to young people
to sit on their heels. Children do that naturally so if
they never had furniture they would do it. Its wonderful
for all parts of the body.
Ganga: Weve talked about conscious conception
and conscious birth. What can you say about conscious aging,
conscious dying?
Laura: There is no way not to know that one is aging,
but how much attention do you pay to it and of what kind,
morbid or healthy? Morbid attention is when we focus only
on the shortcomings that come with aging, which are inevitable,
and think that everything that is wrong is a result of aging.
Healthy attention is to improve what can be improved and
to accept what we cannot improve. And, one would hope that
age teaches us how to be more aware of other people's feelings.
Many times I thought I was dying. I think, "this is
it", but I never did die. So it is always still a question
of a projection of our imagination. One time I thought I
was dying (remember, you were there) and I didnt so
it is very difficult to speak about it. We dont know
what happens when, one by one, all the senses go and the
body is already starting this disintegration. So we dont
know how our mind and our feeling will be. I have seen several
deaths, too many deaths in my life, and they were all different.
Each one was different. It didnt seem to be necessarily
connected with the life of the person. Some people that
were not particularly developed or outstanding or spiritual
died very easily. Some other people were on a very high
level and had a difficult time in dying. So I dont
know, but its certainly something to think about because
it could happen at any moment. I think that, at least in
my experience, it is difficult when there is unfinished
work. That makes it difficult to think of dying when what
you have to do is not quite done. Of course its never
quite done.
Since I was young my wish has been to die in perfect healthI
mean to die with a body that is not destroyed by illness
but a body that is consumed by its own long burning fire.
Such a wish may be judged as an expression of hubrisI
don't knowbut it is a project that cannot hurt anyone
and may even be a blessing to those that love us.
Ganga: What inspired you to do service work and
work with children?
Laura: Service. Service or giving is the other side
of receiving. Giving and receiving is a full circle: a full
circle feels more natural than a half circle.
Children. Initially it was emotional and personal experiences
that turned my attention to childrenthat was the start.
It continued not only emotionally, but also logically, for
it is clear that our society can improve only if the next
generation is given the chance, through loving and intelligent
education, to be better developed than the present one.
That is why my foundation is called Our Ultimate Investment.
For many of us it is obvious that children are our ultimate
investment, but unfortunately children are also the ultimate
investment of the gun, tobacco and the liquor industries.
Ganga: Any final thoughts that you can share?
Laura: What I say is focus your mind and respect
your body. But mostly love your heart. I think that is where
to begin, from there and then it goes out.
Ganga: What do you mean love your heart?
Laura: Love your heart. It really is to love yourself
to begin with and help everybody else in doing the same.
But the heart being the center. You can focus your mind.
You can respect your body. All of that is important. Then
if you love your heart, this can be transmitted to other
people. I mean you can help anybody that wants to do the
same.
Have we covered the world and all the wisdom of the ages?
Ganga: Yes.
Laura: Of the ages of eighty-six, in any case.
Ganga: Thank you.
RESOURCE: Our Ultimate Investment
Post Office Box 1868
Los Angeles, CA 90028
213-461-8248
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